Exclusive: Saudi Arabia building up military near Yemen border EDIT: SAUDI STRIKES BEGIN

88m3

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Yemen conflict: Houthi rebels make gains in Aden
_82134351_c1f565cf-52ca-41ed-8c0b-f83993adc912.jpg

Fighting has intensified in Aden despite 11 days of air strikes by the Saudi-led coalition
Yemen torn apart in war of many sides
Yemen's Shia Houthi rebels have made more gains in the city of Aden, despite air strikes by a Saudi-led coalition.

Fighting in the southern city has intensified as rebels and forces loyal to President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi battle for control.

Countries including China have stepped up efforts to evacuate their citizens amid the worsening humanitarian crisis.

The Red Cross has been given permission by the coalition to bring aid into Yemen by plane.

It says that two planes have been approved by the coalition. One will be a cargo plane carrying vital medical supplies, and the second a small passenger plane with aid workers.

Spokeswoman Sitara Jabeen said that the aim is to fly them both into the capital Sanaa on Monday.

_82130689_india.jpg

India is one of several countries to have repatriated citizens from Yemen
On Saturday, the Red Cross called for a 24-hour ceasefire in Aden, the country's second city, warning that more civilians would die otherwise.

Spokesperson Marie Claire Feghali told the BBC that the humanitarian situation in the city was "dire" and that bodies were beginning to pile up on the streets.

"People cannot go out to buy food, we know that there is a lack of water in the city because the water pipes have been damaged, we are trying to do everything we can but the situation is extremely difficult," she said.

'Too dangerous'
On Sunday, the rebels advanced further into the city, bombarding residential areas and setting fire to several buildings, AFP reports.

Many residents have become trapped in their homes because of the fighting.

Rozmin McKendry from the UK, who has family in Aden, said that her brother could see fighting and shooting from his window.

"They want to get a boat to Djibouti and fly back to the UK, but the streets are too dangerous to travel on," she said.

_82130692_airstrikes.jpg

Houses have been destroyed by the air strikes
At least 185 people have been killed and 1,282 injured in Aden since 26 March, health department director Al-Kheder Lassouar said.

The toll does not include rebel casualties or victims of air raids, he added.

The UN says 500 have been killed over the past two weeks.

Flights out
On Sunday, a Pakistani aircraft rescued 170 people from Sanaa. More than 800 Pakistani citizens have already left the country.

Flights from China, Egypt, Sudan and Djibouti are also scheduled, according to the Saudi-led coalition.

An Algerian aircraft rescued 160 of its citizens along with other north Africans on Saturday.

Russia, India and Indonesia are among other countries to have already carried out evacuations amid increasing international concern.

_82130694_graves.jpg

Charities says more civilians will die unless they are allowed to deliver aid
The Houthis have said their aim is to replace President Hadi's government, which they accuse of being corrupt.

They are supported by troops loyal to the former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was ousted in the Arab Spring protests.

Saudi Arabia says the Houthis have military backing from regional rival Iran, which denies the allegation.

_82130817_yemen_houthi_control_624_v12.jpg

_75306515_line976.jpg

Yemen: who is fighting whom?

The Houthis: Zaidi Shia-led rebels from the north, who seized control of Sanaa last year and have since been expanding their control

President Hadi: Fled to Saudi Arabia after rebel forces advanced on his stronghold in the southern city of Aden

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula: Seen by the US as the most dangerous offshoot of al-Qaeda, AQAP opposes both the Houthis and President Hadi.

Islamic State: A Yemeni affiliate of IS has recently emerged, which seeks to eclipse AQAP

Failure 'not an option for Saudis'

Yemen crisis: An Iranian-Saudi battleground?

Meeting the Houthis - and their enemies

The rise of Yemen's Houthi rebels

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-32188017


bugged out
 

88m3

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Misunderstanding wars in Yemen, Vietnam, and Yemen once again


"Nasser’s chief general in the war, who was later found dead under suspicious circumstances, said of the campaign, “We did not bother to study the local, Arab and international implications or the political and military questions involved. After years of experience we realised that it was a war between tribes and that we entered it without knowing the nature of their land, their traditions and their ideas.” Egypt’s withdrawal, which coincided with the Six-Day War, marked the end of Nasser’s pan-Arabist ambitions. It was a stunning defeat for the country — some would eventually call it “Nasser’s Vietnam.” The comparison is apt. In The Fog of War, McNamara sounds much like Nasser’s humbled field marshal. “In the case of Vietnam, we didn’t know them well enough to empathize,” he says. “And there was a total misunderstanding as a result.”
https://foreignpolicy.com/2015/04/0...l&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
interesting read
 
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88m3

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From the same article

"In the 1960s, the United States had the good sense not to get mired in the war in Yemen. In fact, it was one of the few instances in which the United States did not intervene in some way to counteract creeping Soviet influence. (By then, Nasser was aligned with the Soviet Union, and he even brought the Yemeni president on a Red Sea cruise with Nikita Khrushchev in 1964.) U.S. Ambassador to Britain David Bruce cabled from London in 1968 in that the war was “of no concern to UK’s national interests, nor to U.S. interests… Since Roman days, every foreign power which intervened in Yemen got bogged down in morass of inter-tribal rivalries…If Sovs wanted ‘bases’ or other facilities in Yemen…they could pay the high financial price and take political risks required.” Even when the Yemeni government explicitly invited the United States to take over Egypt’s role as patron, Secretary of State Dean Rusk deferred. “While we sympathize [with] Yemeni republican leaders desire free themselves from [Egypt’s] embrace,” Rusk cabled in 1966, intervening would be a “desperate and extremely risky gamble".

https://foreignpolicy.com/2015/04/0...l&utm_source=facebook.com&utm_campaign=buffer
 

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Saudi air strikes pound school in Yemen, kill 6 students

Fresh Saudi airstrikes on Yemen’s southwestern Ibb Province have claimed the lives of at least six school students, in the latest military aggression of the Arab country against Yemeni civilians.

According to reports, Saudi-led warplanes pounded the province on Tuesday under the pretext of bombing the Yemeni army’s Al Hamza Brigade.

This is while the Saudi attacks on Yemen's infrastructure and the civilian casualties have enraged anti-Saudi sentiments among the Yemenis.

“I’m an ordinary citizen. I’m not a soldier or affiliated to any group. So when the war planes targeted a public gas station, sending waves of fire and killing and injuring a lot of people, this is an international conspiracy against the whole country,” an old man who had sustained injuries in Saudi air strikes told Press TV.

http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/04/07/405091/Saudi-air-strikes-kill-students-in-Yemen


:sas1:





Here's stunning footage of Saudi Arabia's airstrikes against the Houthi rebels in Yemen

 

Piff Perkins

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You rarely hear a US president take a shot at Saudi Arabia. It's a subtle shot, but a shot nonetheless. What they're doing to their population isn't sustainable, especially as the US moves away from foreign oil.
 

88m3

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You rarely hear a US president take a shot at Saudi Arabia. It's a subtle shot, but a shot nonetheless. What they're doing to their population isn't sustainable, especially as the US moves away from foreign oil.


I've heard Kerry and the King of Jordan on the same tip lately. It'll be an interesting century for sure. As it is the right now the area is a powder keg and we're bound to see something serious within the next ten years if there isn't a serious repression or education and political awakening/loosening.
 

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Yemen conflict: Houthi rebels make gains in Aden
_82134351_c1f565cf-52ca-41ed-8c0b-f83993adc912.jpg

Fighting has intensified in Aden despite 11 days of air strikes by the Saudi-led coalition
Yemen torn apart in war of many sides
Yemen's Shia Houthi rebels have made more gains in the city of Aden, despite air strikes by a Saudi-led coalition.

Fighting in the southern city has intensified as rebels and forces loyal to President Abdrabbuh Mansour Hadi battle for control.

Countries including China have stepped up efforts to evacuate their citizens amid the worsening humanitarian crisis.

The Red Cross has been given permission by the coalition to bring aid into Yemen by plane.

It says that two planes have been approved by the coalition. One will be a cargo plane carrying vital medical supplies, and the second a small passenger plane with aid workers.

Spokeswoman Sitara Jabeen said that the aim is to fly them both into the capital Sanaa on Monday.

_82130689_india.jpg

India is one of several countries to have repatriated citizens from Yemen
On Saturday, the Red Cross called for a 24-hour ceasefire in Aden, the country's second city, warning that more civilians would die otherwise.

Spokesperson Marie Claire Feghali told the BBC that the humanitarian situation in the city was "dire" and that bodies were beginning to pile up on the streets.

"People cannot go out to buy food, we know that there is a lack of water in the city because the water pipes have been damaged, we are trying to do everything we can but the situation is extremely difficult," she said.

'Too dangerous'
On Sunday, the rebels advanced further into the city, bombarding residential areas and setting fire to several buildings, AFP reports.

Many residents have become trapped in their homes because of the fighting.

Rozmin McKendry from the UK, who has family in Aden, said that her brother could see fighting and shooting from his window.

"They want to get a boat to Djibouti and fly back to the UK, but the streets are too dangerous to travel on," she said.

_82130692_airstrikes.jpg

Houses have been destroyed by the air strikes
At least 185 people have been killed and 1,282 injured in Aden since 26 March, health department director Al-Kheder Lassouar said.

The toll does not include rebel casualties or victims of air raids, he added.

The UN says 500 have been killed over the past two weeks.

Flights out
On Sunday, a Pakistani aircraft rescued 170 people from Sanaa. More than 800 Pakistani citizens have already left the country.

Flights from China, Egypt, Sudan and Djibouti are also scheduled, according to the Saudi-led coalition.

An Algerian aircraft rescued 160 of its citizens along with other north Africans on Saturday.

Russia, India and Indonesia are among other countries to have already carried out evacuations amid increasing international concern.

_82130694_graves.jpg

Charities says more civilians will die unless they are allowed to deliver aid
The Houthis have said their aim is to replace President Hadi's government, which they accuse of being corrupt.

They are supported by troops loyal to the former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was ousted in the Arab Spring protests.

Saudi Arabia says the Houthis have military backing from regional rival Iran, which denies the allegation.

_82130817_yemen_houthi_control_624_v12.jpg

_75306515_line976.jpg

Yemen: who is fighting whom?

The Houthis: Zaidi Shia-led rebels from the north, who seized control of Sanaa last year and have since been expanding their control

President Hadi: Fled to Saudi Arabia after rebel forces advanced on his stronghold in the southern city of Aden

Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula: Seen by the US as the most dangerous offshoot of al-Qaeda, AQAP opposes both the Houthis and President Hadi.

Islamic State: A Yemeni affiliate of IS has recently emerged, which seeks to eclipse AQAP

Failure 'not an option for Saudis'

Yemen crisis: An Iranian-Saudi battleground?

Meeting the Houthis - and their enemies

The rise of Yemen's Houthi rebels

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-32188017


bugged out
like i said...these houthi's aint no hoe

How they running up on the most advance militaries and STILL making gains.

They embraced the Saudis in 2009 and it looks like they're doing it again :wow:
 

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